Poetry News

Celebrating the Centennial of Thomas Merton

Originally Published: January 28, 2015

Events to celebrate the life of poet and mystic Thomas Merton are being planned worldwide, reports Melville House, to mark his centennial this month. Claire Kelley writes:

Last week at the Brooklyn Public Library, Christopher Beha of Harper’s Magazine, novelist Colm Tóibín, and editor and author Paul Elie discussed the legacy of Thomas Merton’s writing on spiritual wisdom, nonviolence, and meditation, in an event co-presented by New Directions, Merton’s publisher.

Each presenter discussed why Merton meant to much to him personally.

Beha discussed the way that Merton lived—spending 25 years in the Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky—as a source of inspiration: “To order our lives according to our natures and not on the terms of a fallen and disordered world is I think the challenge that Merton offers all of us. But that means to be like Merton it does not mean we have to become Trappists. We merely have to become ourselves.”

Paul Elie, the former FSG editor who wrote The Life You Save May Be Your Own, a biography of Thomas Merton, Dorothy Day, Flannery O’Connor, and Walker Percy said “The way I understand Merton, a century on is that he’s a creative writer in one sense—his work is a kind of imaginative criticism of the world we live in and of the various schemes and programs we’ve erected. Merton could always imagine a more perfect place and spends a lot of energy of his journals imagining himself somewhere else—even though he found this perfect place in the monastary. The other thing he does imaginatively is that he identifies with other writers—with Blake, Augustine, Dante, Jacques Maritain, Pasternak, Czesław Miłosz various poets like Ernesto Cardenal in Nicaragua, Asian mystics, Camus—that idenfitication is what we feel in his work, so that we identify imaginatively with him.”

Read it all at Melville House.